giovedì, giugno 26, 2014

Sunday wasn’t a good day in northern Iraq’s al-Hamdaniyah district.
The previous night, Sunni extremist militants had snatched 26 Shia
Turkmen from their homes. For the second week, residents had no running
water and almost no electricity. The local hospital was almost out of
medicine, and the doctor running the emergency room was fretting about
scorpions.

“We still have anti-venom for the snake bites, but nothing left for
the scorpions,” said the doctor, Zakar Bayati. “The scorpions here can
kill small children.”Bayati, a pediatrician, had stepped in as emergency room chief
because most of the hospital’s doctors were huddled in their homes 25
kilometers northwest in Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, too scared to
travel to work. The hospital usually had 15 doctors, Bayati said.
During my visit to the hospital on Tuesday in Bakhdid, the district’s
largest town, they had four.Mosul fell June 10 to the armed militant group Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria (ISIS). Thousands of Iraqi government troops and civilians
fled east across al-Hamdaniyah and other parts of the Nineveh Plains, a
religiously diverse region that includes Assyrian and Chaldean
Christians, Turkmen, Shabaks, and predominantly Kurdish Yazidis. ISIS
followed, coming within 100 meters of Bakhdida, a local police official
and two generals from the area said in interviews there.The drive to Badkdida, a 30-kilometer
trip west from Kurdistan’s capital, Erbil, involved passing five
peshmerga checkpoints. The eastbound lane was jammed with cars of Iraqis
fleeing to already overflowing Kurdish refugee camps.Authorities in Kurdistan, an autonomous region of northeastern Iraq
that has designs on the oil-rich Nineveh Plains, have dispatched 1,500
Kurdish peshmerga troops to al-Hamdaniyah to keep ISIS at bay.
But the security officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said
that hundreds of ISIS fighters remained in in Namrud, a township just 5
kilometers from Bakhdida past the peshmerga cordon.The night before my visit, ISIS gunmen had entered al-Shansiat, another community just south of the peshmerga line
in al-Hamdaniyah. They seized 26 Shia Turkmen, prompting scores of
other Shia families from those two minority groups to flee the area, the
security officials and a local Christian leader said. “We don’t know
what they will do to them – take them to fight or kill them,” the local
police official said.Around that same time, ISIS was rounding up and executing groups of Shia Turkmen in villages outside of the city of Kurkuk, to the south.ISIS has refrained from fighting the peshmerga, but
al-Hamdaniya residents feared that standoff might not last. “DA’ASH is
too close,” said Badr, an Assyrian shopkeeper in Bakhdida, using the
Arabic acronym for ISIS. “And what happens if the peshmerga leave?”Next to Badr’s shop, the local kebab restaurant and most other stores
were shut or empty. As part of a nationwide shortage of basic services
caused by the fighting between ISIS and the Iraqi government, most
al-Hamdaniyah residents have no running water and almost no electricity
or fuel, grinding most activities to a halt.Religious minorities in al-Hamdaniyah and the rest of the Nineveh Plain have historical reasons to be fearful.
Long before ISIS’s rise last year, extremist Sunnis have systematically
killed, displaced, and threatened the Chaldo-Assyrian, Yazidi, and
Shabak communities, labeling them crusaders, devil-worshipers, and
infidels, Kurdish authorities, meanwhile, are pressuring the groups to
support their drive to incorporate Ninevah into Kurdistan.Bombings in Nineveh in August 2007 by suspected armed Islamists
killed more than 300 Yazidis and wounded 700. In May of this year,
suspected ISIS gunmen shot dead
six Yazidi farmers in Nineveh, prompting thousands of other Yazidis to
flee to Sanjar, a town west of Mosul, only to find themselves caught in
fighting in recent days between Shia and ISIS fighters there.In addition to fearing for their lives now, al-Hamdaniyah’s
Chaldo-Assyrian Christians, who comprise 70 percent of the district’s
population, also expressed broader concerns about their future, saying
the current fighting may bring the longstanding Kurdish-Arab contest for
control of Nineveh to a head.Their fears were echoed by the Chaldean patriarch Louis Sako, the
leader of Iraqi Christians. He told me during my visit to Bakhdida that
the situation for his flock was “critical.”“As a minority we face a double threat," Sako said while visiting 35
displaced families from Mosul who were living in classrooms in the
town’s theological center."The country will be divided, it is clear,” Sako said, referring to
proposals to carve up Iraq into three separate political entities for
Sunni, Shia, and Kurds. “Where does that leave the Christians?"

Editor’s note: Letta Tayler is a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch. You can follow her Follow @LettaTayler. The views expressed are her own.